The MEXICO CITY COLLEGE Story: The History: 1940 - 1963

Page Five

NOTES:

A. “The following persons (of the first graduating class in June, 1940) received Associate in Arts diplomas: Helen Scott Gilland, Mary Gilland, Pepita Garcia Colin, Mary Gisholt, Thomas Koralek, Fernando Peñalosa, Leonore Ross, and William Valverde. Those who received the Associate in Science diploma were Guillermo Ahumada, Elaine Rosslyn Gladston, Gilbert Haakh and Lavern A. Miller.

     ”Nine of the ten members of the faculty were also present: Henry Cain, Paul Murray, Albert Bork, Brita Bowen, José Gaos, Atlanta Cole, Montes de Oca, Dimitri Sokoloff, Jesse Vera, and Bonita Clark Wrixton.” -- Prof. Edward Simmen (UDLAP). (Also see post # 497 at http://mx.groups.yahoo.com/group/mexicocitycollege/ for more detail on this ceremony.)

B. “The Death of Joan V. Burroughs,” by James W. Grauerholz, American Studies Dept., Univ. of Kansas, January 7, 2002:

     “A strange thing—as Ed Simmen has pointed out to me—is that, in all the contemporaneous Mexico City newspaper accounts (22 stories examined, to date), there is not one single mention of Mexico City College. And yet, the killer, and one of the eyewitnesses, and the young man who came by to consider buying a pistol from Burroughs, and the boy who identified Joan's body, and the tenant in whose apartment the shooting occurred—all were currently or recently students enrolled at M.C.C. The Bounty bar was almost entirely patronized by a certain subset of M.C.C. students; the entire 122 Monterrey building was full of them.

     “Just as clubby was the world of the college’s American founders, President Henry L. Cain and Dean of Faculty, Paul V. Murray. Although M.C.C.’s finances were a tremendous struggle in the early years, and Dean Murray even mortgaged his home to support the school at one point, these two men were well-connected within a middle to lower rung of the American-Mexican ‘old-boy network.’ And this, at a time when Mexico was relatively supine beneath the postwar American business invasion. Murray and Cain had power, and—thanks to their primary patrons, the Jenkins Foundation—money. If they did not want their school mentioned in newspaper accounts of a lurid, scandalous killing, it was surely within their ability to see that it did not happen. Of course, the American G.I. ‘colony’ in Colonia Roma did not usually command wide journalistic attention in DF — except when it brought out a story like this one. Perhaps the reporters were simply uninterested in the M.C.C. connection; or perhaps their editors operated at that time under a general policy of not offending the American institutions established in Mexico. If Dr. Simmen’s theory is correct, Murray or Cain must have somehow exerted influence on editors who were specifically looking to scandalize or discredit M.C.C.—and that is possible.” http://old.lawrence.com/burroughs/deathofjoan-full.pdf. (p. 42.)

C. Robert Barlow fell ill shortly thereafter and was forced to take a leave of absence. The following year, 1951, he died.

     “The 2nd edition was published in 1950 and was edited by Barlow's assistant, Leon Abrams, Jr (graduate student). Articles included works by Barrios, Horcasitas, Pedro Armillas, Eduardo Noguera, Ignacio Bernal, Patricia Fent Ross, Donald Kimmel, and Wigberto Jiménez Moreno. (Jiménez Moreno and Pedro Bosch Gimpera had founded the Dept. of Anthropology at MCC in 1947.)

     “John Paddock, who first came to MCC as a graduate student in 1951 became the editor in 1952. Issue No. 3 was published in October, 1953 and was an expansion on a single theme, Excavaciones in the Mixteca Alta and consisted of reports on field work being carried on by students. The issue was written by Paddock based on materials provided by Robert Winter and Francis Guess and participating students: Tikey Magionos, Frank Moore, Robert Wiley, Lee Arnett, Arthur Parker and Herbert Nell. A graduate student from USC and Paddock provided photographs and Charles Wicke was responsible for the drawings.

     “Issue No. 4 was not published until December, 1955. Tom Swinson was the editor and his assistant was Donald Brockington. Paddock was not the faculty advisor since he had joined the staff in 1953. This issue was dedicated to the excavations made at Yagul, Oaxaca and was to be the first in a series of reports of MCC's work at this site. This issue contains work by Fernando Horcasitas, Richard George, John Paddock, James Oliver, C. Chard Meigs, and others.

     “The 5th edition appeared two years later in August, 1957. This issue was also edited by Swinson and Brockington and continued the emphasis on the work in Oaxaca and at Yagul primarily. Articles were by Paddock, Charles Wicke, Horcasitas, Brockington, and Irmgard W. Johnson.

     “The next issue did not appear until 1965 due to the considerable turmoil at all levels of the College including changes of the president and even changes of the name of the College to the University of the Américas. Issue 6 was also very different from the previous issues in that it dealt with reviews of books published by Oscar Lewis and reviewed by John Paddock: Five Families, The Children of Sanchez, Pedro Martínez: A Mexican Peasant and His Family . The issue was to be used as a text for classes at the University. Needless to say, this was also the time when the Attorney General of Mexico accused Oscar Lewis of writing obscene literature and sent the Mexican press into an uproar.

     “A double issue, No. 7 & 8, appeared the following year and returned to the original format used by Barlow. This issue was dedicated to the XI Round Table of the Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología which was held in México City in August of 1966. The great site of Teotihuacan was the special topic to be discussed. John Paddock was again editing Mesoamerican Notes, and he selected graduate thesis on Teotihuacan which had been written over the years at MCC and UDLA. Authors included Robert Chadwick, Will T. Levey, Frank Moore, and Evelyn C. Rattray. Paddock's assistants for this issue were Estelle Keller, Joseph Moger, Andrea Wakefield and Iris Hart.

     “The same year, 1966, John Paddock left UDLA and became director of the Instituto de Estudios Oaxaqueños in Mitla, Oaxaca. John had also published Ancient Oaxaca.

     “It was not until Fall of 1983 that the 9th edition of the journal appeared with the name, Notas Mesoamericanas. The editor was now Edward Simmen and the issue was dedicated to Dr. Wigberto Jiménez Moreno and Dr. John Paddock.”

(The brief description above by Dr. Mike Porath is based on material from the Preface of the 9th edition of Mesoamerican Notes, written by Dr. Edward Simmen. This description is included in its entirety because of the importance archaeology has played with MCC, and for the students and teachers involved.)

D. The late U.S. citizen William O. Jenkins, of Puebla, MX, was “a mysterious buccaneer businessman who has built the biggest personal fortune in Mexico,” (Time, Dec 26, 1960. p.25), and established (1954) the Mary Street Jenkins Foundation, in honor of his wife, for the benefit of the Mexican people, specifically for Puebla. Jenkins “left very little of his money to his family, endowing instead the Foundation. (True to the American ideology), by 1988, the Foundation had provided more than $150 million for education, culture, health, welfare (including orphan schools) and sports through more than 300 specific grants” Of his many profitable ventures, Jenkins purchases of local banks culminated in the establishment of one of the largest banks in Latin America, the Bancomer. http://web.archive.org/web/20050308092408/http:/www.udlap.mx/~malcocer/amer.shtml

     “In 1963 I calculated that the Mary Street Jenkins Foundation then bore the same ratio to the Mexican economy as did the Rockefeller Foundation to the US economy.” (Luke Case on Bill Jenkins: see http://www.dartmouth/, next link below.)

     Enter the ghost of Juan Hernandez: UDLAP was first run by an ex-banker, Espinosa Igleszia. He also headed the Jenkins Foundation. In subsequent years Igleszias managed to expel members of the Jenkins from the Board of the Foundation, taking control of it and the Campus.11 Bill Jenkins countered with legal action in Federal court and “After a seven-year struggle, he regained control of the Mary Street Jenkins Foundation.” (www.dartmouth.org/classes/54/Newsletter/NL0307.htm. July, 2003). This resulted in restoring the Foundation to its original status and the Campus to the rightful academic administration. (For a brief summary of how UDLAP was later changed by President Macias Rendon, (1975-76), from a liberal arts institution into a technocratic institution to provide job training for engineers, and the decade long battle to reverse the trend, see Wilkie, ibid, p. 95.)

     Nor has the small DF campus been exempt from avarice. The 91-year-old American author Russell Abbot Ames was fighting for his right to stay on disputed land in San Pablo Etla, a tiny village in the mountains above Oaxaca. He says that although he and his wife donated their 20-acre homestead to the university in 1988, they did so with the agreement that they could live there until they died. Because of a technicality (his wife died first), the DF campus attempted to immediately evict the 91-year old American; a man who has shared so much of his good fortune with the Mexican people. (For details, see Post No. 511, at http://mx.groups.yahoo.com/group/mexicocitycollege/ )

E. UDLA-Puebla is the only institution outside the United States that has a program whereas its students serve as U.S. Congressional interns in Washington, DC, “While (then Congressman Bill Richardson and I visited in Washington, DC), I noticed the students serving as interns. I asked him if he would take a couple from the UDLAP. He said, ‘I think it is against the law.’ Yes, we found out it is. You can’t have foreigners ‘working’ in Congress because there is so much confidential material they must work with. And of course our students can’t work because they have no papers. (We say our students ‘serve’ in the office of Congressmen.) And also it is against the Mexican constitution for a Mexican to ‘work’ for a foreign government. Oh, well, we do it anyway. The students get the added benefit of meeting with the Mexican ambassador to the US while they are there. It is a marvelous and successful program. I really enjoy having initiated it. Such students!” (--Dr. Edward Simmen.9)

F. Dr. Paul V. Murray's son (Paul V. Murray, Jr., Ph.D. Education) writes, ". . . my father's idealism got in the way of making clear and difficult decisions which eventually ended his administration."

      But it is such idealism which gives birth to dreams that can blossom beyond expectations. Ironically, all too often, once matured, effective maintenance and growth then requires the skills of a “non-dreamer;” such skills are usually at odds to nurturing a dream from its infancy.

G. William B. Richardson, Jr., the current Governor of New Mexico [former Congressman, and former Ambassador to the UN] and the son of William B. Richardson (former MCC Board of Trustees Chair) attended MCC as a high school student for one summer, and then attended “another school” in D.F. Mr. Richardson was the Commencement Speaker at the Universidad de las Américas-Puebla 2003 Graduation Ceremonies, and was awarded the Honoris Causa Degree. (See Note H, below.)

H. William Richardson, Sr., MCC Board of Trustees Chair, was forcibly removed from the board, as noted in this letter dated July 14, 1961, and sent from Frank A. Tredennick Jr to Dr. Nils Y. Wessell (who at the time was president of Tufts University. http://www.wargs.com/political/richardson.html ):

     “I had a long discussion this week with Fred J. Lauerman, executive assistant to the president of Mexico City College. He reported to me that Mexico City College had made its greatest stride forward in years by forcibly deposing Bill Richardson from the board of trustees. The general feeling, however, is that the action came too late and that Richardson's leadership has been so misdirected and yet so strong that the College will probably go under in the next year or two.”

I. The Gadfly, an alternative student newspaper, was published by Peter and Lucia Montague. Only four issues were published, the last in December, 1961. “There were two bombshell stories in this last issue. First was the fact that the Michigan state university system had announced that they were no longer accepting credits from MCC, thereby ending Michigan's involvement in the ‘Winter Quarter in Mexico’ program.   NOTE: The author has not been able to corroborate this story.)

     The other articles involved the so called “Foot Sniffing Certificate,” which ridiculed the Dean of Men (see page 6, above), as well as the policies and personalities of the Mexican Government. This latter volley sent the Federales looking for anyone who was mentioned in The Gadfly article, most all were residents of Cuajimalpa and Contadero. No arrests were made, mainly because, by happy chance, several had already left for their ritual fun and games in Acapulco. http://mx.groups.yahoo.com/group/mexicocitycollege/ (Post No. 1218.)

     Like most “bomb throwers,” the publishers of The Gadfly left the country before the last issue was distributed.

J.¨MCC stands about 900 feet above the Valley of Mexico on a prominence known as La Angostura (the Narrow Point). This neck of land separates the ravine of Tlapecho on the north from that of Cuitlapechco on the south, the latter flanked on one side by precipitous sand cliffs called Peñablanca. These lands lie in an area known in Aztec times as the Province of Cuahuacan, and are now incorporated into the township of Santa Fe, D.F.¨ Possibly more so than any other area surrounding the Valley, this prominence “reflects the multicultural and multilingual history of the nation: this vantage point has witnessed the early semi nomadic Otomí life along with their peaceful neighbors the Matlatzinca, the great expansion of the Aztec Empire and their annual, great hunt on this prominence where the college now stands, the 16th-Century Conquest and the colonization and missionary efforts (including the extraordinary Utopian project of Santa Fe, located just below where the College now stands, undertaken by Don Vasco de Quiroga, the remarkable first bishop of Michoacán), and the wars of Independence, the witnessing of departure and arrival of many a military expedition along a three-hundred year old Indian road that passed through the area, the years of political upheaval and, finally, a successful experimental international educational institute,¨ the Mexico City College. Adapted from Fernando Horcasitas, “Cuauhtlalpan,” The Collegian, Dec. 17, 1955.

                                  
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(Editor’s Note: Fourteen Volumes of The MCC Collegian, representing 182 issues from 1947 to 1961, were accessed in the compilation of this History. The issues have been digitalized and are online at:
http://catarina.udlap.mx:9090/u_dl_a/citext/mcc

Acknowledgements:

     It is a pleasure to note that this history is, in effect, a product of the spirit of many who were eager to contribute over the years. I wish to thank Dr. Richard W. Wilkie, MCC class of ’59, Professor of Geography, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Professor Edward Simmen, Docente-Investigador, Deptos. de Lenguas y Literatura, Universidad de las Americas, Puebla (UDLAP), and Professor Arturo Valentin Arrieta Audiffred, UDLAP Biblioteca for their generous, prompt responses to my many requests for various information, photos and clarification of points. I also wish to thank Terrence Parker, editor of the literary weekly, The Moon, for his many excllent suggestions and for proofreading of the text.
                                                                                                                                –Joseph M. Quinn. 2006

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